Open Journal of Composite Materials, 2021, 11, 47-61 https://www.scirp.org/journal/ojcm ISSN Online: 2164-5655 ISSN Print: 2164-5612

Recipe Development and Mechanical Characterization of Carbon Fibre Reinforced Recycled Filament

Mwambe Polline1, James M. Mutua2, Thomas Ochuku Mbuya3, Kyekyere Ernest1

1Department of Mechanical Engineering, Pan African University Institute for Basic Sciences, Technology and Innovation, Nairobi, Kenya 2Department of Mechanical Engineering, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Nairobi, Kenya 3Department of Mechanical & Manufacturing Engineering, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya

How to cite this paper: Polline, M., Mutua, Abstract J.M., Mbuya, T.O. and Ernest, K. (2021) Recipe Development and Mechanical Cha- Recycled polypropylene filaments for fused filament fabrication were investi- racterization of Carbon Fibre Reinforced gated with and without 14 wt% short fibre carbon reinforcements. The mi- Recycled Polypropylene 3D Printing Fila- crostructure and mechanical properties of the filaments and 3D printed spe- ment. Open Journal of Composite Materials, cimens were characterized using scanning electron microscopy and standard 11, 47-61. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojcm.2021.113005 tensile testing. It was observed that recycled polypropylene filaments with 14 wt% short carbon fibre reinforcement contained pores that were dispersed Received: June 27, 2021 throughout the microstructure of the filament. A two-stage filament extru- Accepted: July 27, 2021 sion process was observed to improve the spatial distribution of carbon fibre Published: July 30, 2021 reinforcement but did not reduce the pores. Recycled polypropylene fila- Copyright © 2021 by author(s) and ments without reinforcement extruded at high screw speeds above 20 rpm Scientific Research Publishing Inc. contained a centreline cavity but no spatially distributed pores. However, this This work is licensed under the Creative cavity is eliminated when extrusion is carried out at screw speeds below 20 Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). rpm. For 3D printed specimens, interlayer cavities were observed larger for http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ specimens printed from 14 wt% carbon fibre reinforced recycled polypropy- Open Access lene than those printed from unreinforced filaments. The values of tensile

strength for the filaments were 21.82 MPa and 24.22 MPa, which reduced to 19.72 MPa and 22.70 MPa, respectively, for 3D printed samples using the fi- laments. Likewise, the young’s modulus of the filaments was 1208.6 MPa and 1412.7 MPa, which reduced to 961.5 MPa and 1352.3 MPa, respectively, for the 3D printed samples. The percentage elongation at failure for the recycled polypropylene filament was 9.83% but reduced to 3.84% for the samples printed with 14 wt% carbon fiber reinforced polypropylene filaments whose elongation to failure was 6.58%. The SEM observations on the fractured ten- sile test samples showed interlayer gaps between the printed and the adjacent raster layers. These gaps accounted for the reduction in the mechanical prop-

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erties of the printed parts.

Keywords Fused Filament Fabrication, Fused Deposition Modeling, 3D Printing, Carbon Fibre Reinforced Polymers, Polypropylene, Plastic Recycling

1. Introduction

3D printing is an additive manufacturing process that produces components from 3D CAD files through added material layers [1] [2]. It allows physically tangible products drawn in CAD software to be fabricated by depositing mate- rials layer by layer. This new industrial revolutionary process has shown rapid adoption and growth in product development and manufacturing. The process uses a range of rapid prototyping methods, including fused deposition modeling, powder-bed printing, ink-jetting, stereolithography, selective laser sintering, and many other new methods that have been developed for 3D printing of compo- sites [3]. Among these methods, fused deposition modeling (FDM) or fused fi- lament fabrication (FFF) is the predominant process used across manufacturing industries to make prototypes for functional testing [4] [5]. FDM or FFF is a 3D CAD-controlled process that melts the feedstock in the extrusion head [6]. The semi-molten material is extruded through a heated noz- zle and deposited layer-by-layer to build a 3D part, as shown in Figure 1. Post-processing of the printed part may be necessary to clean and remove any support. In the FDM method, the first stage is to create a 3D model with CAD software. The part file is then transformed into a Stereolithography file (STL) which contains the instruction codes for the machine tool to pursue a defined tool path [7]. FDM technology offers lower cost, robustness, multi-material flexibility, and simplicity [4].

Figure 1. Schematic representation of the FDM or FFF process.

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Manufacturers develop products that exhibit multi-property characteristics through FDM filaments that are produced by heating, extruding, and cooling materials such as plastics to transform nurdles into the finished filaments. The FDM material filaments allow manufacturers to produce actual parts that can be used for prototyping, functional testing, installation and, most significantly, end-use [5]. Research in FDM shows that the primary materials used include acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), polyamide, , polyethylene (PE), and polypropylene (PP) [5] [8]. Busch et al. [9] characterized the five dif- ferent materials used for 3D printing in fused deposition modeling, which in- cluded Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), (PLA), , Bendlay, and High Impact Sheet (HIPS). Research shows that the open-source 3D printing platform rapidly expands the broader adoption of after-consumer plastic recycling at home [10] [11]. These studies reflect a possible evolution of a networked manufacturing future suitable for developed and developing countries with lower environmental im- pacts than the current system. In addition, the growth of desktop 3D printers has stimulated recycled 3D printer filament interest to reduce distributed production costs [12]. Seven types of plastics that are widely recycled today include polye- thylene terephthalate (PET), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), polyvinyl chlo- ride (PVC), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), polypropylene, polystyrene (PS), and primarily polycarbonate (PC) [12]. Although all these plastics are recyclable, few have been investigated and used to make filaments for 3D printing. The growing adoption of 3D printing technology has enabled the use of ad- vanced filament material, ranging from virgin pellets (ABS/PLA), plastic wastes, and recycled 3D printed composites [12]. Polypropylene plastic wastes have also been recycled for filament fabrication and use in FDM. Spoerk et al. [13] inves- tigated the mechanical recyclability of PP-heat stabilized filaments for FDM ap- plications suitable for multiple remanufacturing sequences. The study reported that PP composite in the course of 15 consecutive filament extrusions and addi- tively manufactured PP composite revealed an unaltered morphology, same ten- sile and impact strength as the initial material. Zander et al. [14] also investi- gated the filament fabrication using recycled PP and PET wastes blends for 3D printing. The effect of blend composition and compatibilizer on the resulting mechanical properties showed that blends of PP/PET compatibilizer with styrene-ethylene/butylene-styrene (SEBS) and maleic anhydride functionalized SEBS had tensile strengths of 23 ± 1 MPa and 24 ± 1 MPa, respectively. Howev- er, several 3D printed polymer components are still used as theoretical proto- types rather than practical components, primarily because these thermoplastic products lack the required strength and reliability as fully functional compo- nents [15]. The current development efforts in 3D printing of polymer compo- sites contributes to the solution of these challenges by integrating fibre or na- no-material reinforcements into polymers resulting in high mechanical strength and superior functionality [4]. Recent studies on the effect of adding carbon fibre of different content and

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length showed a trend in enhanced mechanical properties of the manufactured components [16] [17]. Ning et al. [18] studied the effect of adding carbon fibre to plastic materials. The study found that the carbon fibre increased the tensile strength and Young’s modulus but decreased toughness, yield strength, and duc- tility. Mori et al. [19] also reported that the addition of carbon fibre reinforce- ment to ABS significantly increased the tensile strength and hardness of 3D printed parts. Therefore, there is a significant potential for improving the prop- erties of FDM manufactured parts through the appropriate addition of rein- forcements to polymer filament material. This improvement is expected to be more significant with the increased adoption of recycled to pro- duce FDM filaments. This paper, therefore, presents the results of an experimental study to develop high-quality carbon fiber reinforced recycled polypropylene (CFR-PP) filaments for FDM component manufacture. The ratios of carbon fiber reinforcements to the plastic waste matrix (CFR-PP composite mix) for the optimum mechanical properties were first established. Then the filament was extruded following the developed CFR-PP composite mix and used to produce 3D printed specimens. Mechanical testing of the filaments and 3D printed tensile test samples was car- ried out. The microstructure of the CFR-PP composite filaments and the frac- ture surface characteristics of failed tensile specimens were also investigated.

2. Materials & Methods 2.1. Filament Materials

Granulated pellets of recycled PP (supplied by Mr. Green Africa, Nairobi, Kenya) of melt flow rate 33.8 g/10 min (with 5000 g weight at 230˚C) and short carbon fibre (supplied by Shenzhen Yataida High-Tech. Co., Ltd, Guangdong, China) were used for the experimental study. The specifications of materials used are summarized in Table 1 as obtained from the suppliers.

2.2. CFR-PP Filament Composition Design

The determination of the optimum CFR-PP composite mix was a prerequisite for the extrusion of carbon fibre-reinforced recycled PP filament. Using the synthesizer tool in CES Edupack 2019 software, the percentage weight (wt%) of the short carbon fibre was varied up to 20% using 1% increments. The effect of addition to two types of short carbon fibres (high strength and high modulus) to the PP polymer matrix was simulated. The simulation runs gave predicted phys- ical and mechanical properties of the resulting composite (e.g. density, Young’s

Table 1. Specifications of filament materials.

Density Tensile Young’s Average fiber Fibre/Pellet Material (g/cm3) Strength (MPa) Modulus (GPa) length (um) diameter Recycled PP 0.574 22.5 1.24 - 5.04 mm

Short carbon fiber 1.75 3500 230 200 7.0 um

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Modulus, tensile strength). The results showed an increasing trend of the com- posite filament’s physical and mechanical properties at the expense of flexibility. The flexibility of the filament is a crucial requirement for feedstock winding on the spooler. To achieve optimum values of desired properties and maintain filament flex- ibility, a design of experiment (DOE) was performed using Minitab 19 software. The two input factors (high strength and high modulus short carbon fibre) and 20 levels of the 1% incremental percentage weight (wt%) of the short carbon fibre were modeled using the general full factorial design. The test order was randomized, and all the points were replicated once, which resulted in 40 expe- rimental combinations. The output factors were density, the young’s modulus, and tensile strength. Finally, with a significance level of 5%, the individual tar- geted values of desired mechanical properties for a specific material application were combined, and a 14 wt% high modulus short carbon fibre composition was found to predict the most improved properties. The detailed results are given in the result section.

2.3. Filament Fabrication

The single-screw extruder machine (SJ35, Zhangjiagang, China) that feeds the raw material into the three controlled heating zones with a die nozzle of 3.0 mm diameter was used to extrude filaments of both recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP. The barrel and die nozzle zones were first preheated to a set temperature of 170˚C and 180˚C. This preheating is necessary before the materials are fed through the hopper. Simultaneously, the barrel screw speed was set at 10 rpm forward rotation to push melted material up to the die nozzle. The feed cooling zone was also set to a temperature of 60˚C to preheat the pellets/mixture before entering the barrel zone. For each feeding time, a pre-weighed 300 g of granu- lated PP pellets and 14% wt carbon (300 g of granulated PP pellets mixed ade- quately with 42 g of short carbon fiber) were fed into the barrel when the preset temperatures were reached for the fabrication of recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP filaments. The hot extruded filament was then pulled off by the filament re- ducer rollers set at a speed of 200 mm/s through a water-cooled bath. Finally, the extruded filament was wound up and spooled on the spooler rotating at a speed of 100 mm/s with the help of filament storage rollers. The filament extrusion processing parameters were adjusted accordingly, as summarized in Table 2, to maintain acceptable filament diameter ranges.

2.4. Specimen Manufacture Using Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF)

The fabricated filaments were used for 3D printing using an Ultimaker S3 (Ul- timaker, Zaltbommel, Netherlands). Ultimaker Cura 4.8.0 open-source software was used to generate the .stl files for the printing process. The CAD model of the standard tensile test specimen (Type 1, ASTM D638 [20]), was drawn using So- lidworks 2020 software (Figure 2). Five tensile test specimens were then printed

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Table 2. Filament extrusion process parameters.

Type of material Recycled PP CFR-recycled PP Parameters Value Value Barrel Temp (˚C) 170 180 Die/nozzle Temp (˚C) 180 190 Screw extrusion speed (rpm) 18 - 20 13 - 15 Filament pulling roller speed (mm/s) 300 250 Filament winding roller speed (mm/s) 200 150

Figure 2. Tensile test specimen dimensions.

using the recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP filaments. Printing nozzle diameters of 0.4 mm and 0.6 mm were used for filaments of recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP, respectively. The printing process parameters used are shown in Table 3, in- cluding printing strategy of [0, 90] degrees and percentage infill of 100%. The PP thermoplastics used for the extrusion of filaments were from recycled common commercial grade PP, prone to shrinkage and warpage upon cooling during 3D printing [21]. There was challenge of adhesion of the first 3D printed specimen layer onto the printer build plate. This is the main reason why most commercially marketed PP filaments are modified with blends and composites to overcome this warpage problem [22]. While using Pritt glue and Kapton tape, there was no adhesion of the first print layer onto the printer bed and resulted in the premature termination of the printing. The use of packing tape (Sumo Tape) ensured sufficient adhesion of the print onto the printing bed throughout the printing process. Additionally, the selection of brim adhesion type compared to raft delivered better printing results and compensated for warpage.

2.5. Tensile Testing

Tensile testing was carried out for both the extruded filaments and 3D printed specimens. The tests were conducted under ambient conditions with a gauge length of 50 mm for the filaments and 57.0 mm for 3D printed specimens. Tensile testing was carried out using a 10 kN capacity tensile machine (ST series, Tinius Olsen, United States of America) at a constant loading speed of 50 mm/min. A

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Table 3. FFF printing parameters for recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP.

Recycled PP CFR-recycled PP Parameter Values Values Printing temperature (˚C) 190 210 Printing temperature, initial layer (˚C) 200 220 Build plate temperature (˚C) 85 85 Build plate temperature, initial layer (˚C) 95 95 Infill pattern lines lines Infill flow (%) 110 110 Layer height (mm) 0.3 0.3 Line width (mm) 0.38 0.38 Top and bottom layers (layers) 2 2 Print speed (mm/s) 25 25 Initial layer speed (mm/s) 15 15 Build plate adhesion type brim brim

desktop computer loaded with Horizon Software and connected to the tensile test machine was used to record load (N) and displacement (mm) measure- ments. This data was subsequently analyzed to obtain typical tensile stress-strain graphs that were then used to obtain tensile strength, elongation to fracture, and Young’s Modulus. The fractured tensile specimens were carefully stored to pre- serve the integrity of the fracture surface for subsequent fractography as de- scribed in Section 2.6.

2.6. Microstructure Characterization and Fracture Surface Analysis

The microstructure of the extruded filaments and the 3D printed specimens were investigated using an environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (NeoScope JCM-7000, JEOL Tokyo) set at a low vacuum and an accelerating voltage of 10 kV. First, the extruded filaments were sectioned carefully through the cross-section using a razor blade. For SEM imaging, no special surface treatment or polishing was carried out on the samples. They were then mounted on a specimen holder using double-sided carbon sticker tape and inserted in SEM chamber for imaging. Fractured tensile specimens were also sectioned at 2.0 mm from the fracture region to obtain a convenient specimen size for SEM observation. These were then mounted on a specimen holder using double-sided carbon sticker tape and inserted in SEM chamber for imaging. No special surface treatment was required for SEM imaging.

3. Results and Discussion 3.1. CFR-PP Filament Composite Design Simulation Results

The values of simulated results of predicted physical and mechanical properties

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of the composite filament in varying composition up to 20 wt% are shown in Figure 3. From the simulation results, the effect of adding high strength and high modulus short carbon fibres of weight percentage (1% - 20%) to the PP thermoplastic resulted in increasing properties of density, tensile strength, and the Young’s. The increase in the density property for both high modulus-PP composite and high strength-PP composite was the same, majorly due to the same inherent value of density for the two types of carbon fibres. Tensile strength for high strength-PP composite was slightly higher than that of high mod- ulus-PP composite, while the value for Young’s Modulus was slightly lower than the counterpart. This phenomenon can be attributed to the high stiffness value of high strength short carbon fibres, making them rigid to any deformations. Likewise, the simulated results of predicted physical and mechanical proper- ties of the high modulus short CFR-PP composite in varying composition up to 20 wt% are shown in Figure 4. The simulated mechanical properties for 14 wt% high modulus CFR composite and the actual experimental results of CFR-Recycled PP filament are compared in Table 4.

3.2. Filament Fabrication Using Recycled PP and CFR-Recycled PP Material

The fabrication of filaments within acceptable Ultimaker S3 printer tolerance of 2.85 mm (±0.05) is necessary for achieving constant filament feed during the ad- ditive manufacturing process. Constant filament feed during printing is achieved if the cross-sectional area of the filament is uniform. Preliminary trial printing showed that filaments of 2.0 - 3.0 mm diameter could be printed. To fabricate fi- laments within this acceptable printer range, the hot strands of filament extruded from the 3.0 mm diameter die were pulled by a controlled speed of the reducer

Figure 3. Simulated results for physical and mechanical properties of high modulus and high strength CFR-Recycled PP filament in varying composition up to 20 wt%.

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Table 4. Simulated and experimental results of CFR-Recycled PP filament with 14 wt% carbon fiber.

Parameter Simulated result Experimental result

Density (Kg/m3) 1020 -

Young’s Modulus (MPa) 1590 1413

Tensile strength (MPa) 26.1 24.2

Figure 4. Simulated results for physical and mechanical properties of high modulus CFR-Recycled PP filament in varying composition up to 20 wt%.

rollers as it passed through the water-cooled bath. The speed of this set of rollers (see Table 2) was adjusted until the filament diameter was of workable tolerance on the printer. The resulting filaments from recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP showed constant filament feed behavior during the printing process though they were slightly oval with dimension tolerance of 2.62 (±0.1) × 2.82 (±0.1) mm and 2.65 (±0.1) × 2.75 (±0.1) mm respectively. The fabricated filament was then passed through the filament storage rollers and later wound on a spooler at a controlled speed of 150 mm/s. Although the single screw extruder speed could be set to run up to 50 rpm, the filament extruded was too oval with minimum and maximum diameters of 2.22 (±0.1) and 2.82 (±0.1) mm, respectively. SEM images also show that high extruder speeds yielded filaments that had a centreline cavity possibly due to the limited time given for the pellets to melt and mix well in the barrel, as shown in Figure 5(a). This was the main reason for setting and running the screw speed in the range of (13 - 20) rpm that resulted in filaments without the centreline cavity as shown in Figure 5(b). Scattered inter- nal pores were also observed in the cross-sectional area of the CFR-recycled PP filaments, as shown in Figure 6(a) and Figure 6(c). Additionally, to ensure

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Figure 5. SEM images showing the microstructure of the extruded filaments of recycled PP with a centreline cavity after extrusion at 21 - 50 rpm screw speeds (a) and without the cen- treline cavity after extrusion at lower screw speeds of 13 - 20 rpm (b).

Figure 6. SEM images showing the microstructure of CFR-recycled PP filaments after the first extrusion stage (a) and the second extrusion (c). Inhomogeneous carbon fibre distribu- tion is observed after the first filament extrusion as shown in (b) and improved carbon fibre distribution is shown in (d) after the second filament extrusion.

uniform mixing and distribution of the carbon fibre within the PP matrix, the composite filament was extruded in two stages. After the first extrusion, the composite filament was cut into small pieces by a pair of scissors and fed into the extruder for the second extrusion. This two-stage composite filament extrusion resulted in a better distribution of the carbon fibres in the PP matrix as shown in Figure 6(d) as compared to Figure 6(b).

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3.3. Fracture Interface Observations of Samples Printed Using Recycled PP and CF/Recycled PP Filaments

The fracture surfaces of tensile tested specimens show porosity and interlayer cavities as shown in Figure 7. The interlayer cavities are due to the physical gaps between each layer that were not completely filled during fused fabrication. The effect of reinforcing with short carbon fiber also resulted in the generation of ex- trusion pores in the composite filament as already described in Figure 6. These pores in the filaments are not eliminated during 3D printing as observed in the fracture surface of CFR-recycled PP specimens in Figure 7(d). Each printed layer and the adjacent raster layers of CFR-recycled PP specimens exhibited more and larger interlayer gaps and therefore significant reduction in the inter- facial contact area between the printed layers. This explains the slight reduction in the mechanical properties for the composite filament and 3D printed parts compared to the simulated results (see Table 4). As shown in Figure 7(d), a more significant amount of carbon fibre ruptured at the fractured surfaces of the CFR-recycled PP specimens compared to the fewer ones that were pulled out. This indicates an excellent interfacial adhesion and tensile load transfer between the thermoplastic matrix and the reinforcing carbon fibre.

3.4. Tensile Properties Recycled PP and CFR-Recycled PP

Figure 8(a) shows the tensile strength of both filaments and 3D printed speci- mens manufactured using recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP. It can be seen that

Figure 7. SEM images of tensile fracture surfaces for 3D printed specimens using recycled PP filament (a) and (b), CFR-recycled PP filament (c) and (d) showing inter-layer gaps, porosity, fibre pull-outs and general alignment of fibres in print direction.

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Figure 8. Tensile strength (a), percentage elongation at failure (b), and Young’s Modulus (c) of recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP filaments compared to 3D printed specimens using the filaments.

the addition of short carbon fibres, with an average length of 200 um, to recycled PP increased the tensile strength of the filaments from 21.82 MPa to 24.22 MPa. Jiang et al. [23] reported the highest increase in tensile strength of 48.2% for 3D printed samples after addition of up to 16.8 wt% short carbon fibres (~100 um average length) to ABS, PLA, PETG (polyethylele terephthalate glycol), and amphora polymers. However, when the recycled PP and CFR-recycled PP fila- ments were used for 3D printing of specimens, the tensile strengths reduced from 21.82 MPa and 24.22 MPa to 19.72 MPa and 22.70 MPa, respectively. This reduction is attributed to the existence of the inter-layer porosity and the aniso- tropic mechanical behavior typical in additive manufacturing since the tensile test samples were all printed at raster angles [0, 90]. The improvement in me- chanical strength of 3D printed samples using composite polymers brought by carbon fibre reinforcement is countered to a certain extent by the poor interfa- cial bonding between the 3D printed layers [4]. The percentage elongation at failure for both the filaments and 3D printed samples is shown in Figure 8(b). The value obtained for recycled PP filaments was 9.83% which reduced to 8.21% when the filament was used to 3D print sam- ples. For the CFR-recycled PP filaments, the percentage elongation at failure was 6.58% which reduced to 3.84% for the 3D printed samples. The reduction of the percentage elongation at failure can be attributed to the addition of the brittle high modulus short carbon fibre. These fibres remained oriented in the printing direction as shown in Figure 6(d), similar to what Ferreira et al. [24] observed for 3D printed PLA reinforced with 15 wt% short carbon fibres. The effect of short carbon fibre reinforcement on the Young’s modulus is shown in Figure 8(c). The addition 14 wt% carbon fibre increased the modulus

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of the filaments from 1208.6 MPa to 1412.7 MPa, while the 3D printed speci- mens exhibited reduced modulus values of 961.5 MPa and 1352.3 MPa, respec- tively. When printing using both filaments, the values of Young’s modulus re- duced by 4.3% for CFR-recycled PP and 20.5% for recycled PP. This slight re- duction in values for composite filament may be attributed to interlayer cavities and property anisotropy of the 3D printed specimens.

4. Conclusions

The microstructure and mechanical properties of extruded recycled polypropy- lene filaments without and with 14 wt% carbon fibre reinforcement were inves- tigated. These filaments were subsequently used to 3D print specimens using fused filament fabrication to assess their suitability for additive manufacturing of commercial quality components. The following conclusions can be drawn from the results: 1) Recycled polypropylene filaments extruded at high screw speeds of above 20 rpm exhibit a centreline cavity. However, this cavity is eliminated when ex- trusion is carried out at screw speeds below 20 rpm. 2) Recycled polypropylene filaments with 14 wt% short carbon fibre rein- forcement exhibit pores that are dispersed throughout the microstructure of the filament. A two-stage extrusion improves the spatial distribution of carbon fibre reinforcement but does not reduce the pores. 3) Addition of 14 wt% carbon fibre reinforcement increases the tensile strength of the filaments from 21.82 MPa to 24.22 MPa and their Young’s mod- ulus from 1208.6 MPa to 1412.7 MPa. The elongation to failure is however re- duced from 9.83% to 6.58%. 4) Interlayer cavities were observed in 3D printed specimens. These cavities were larger for specimens printed from 14 wt% carbon fibre reinforced recycled polypropylene as compared with those printed from unreinforced filaments. 5) The tensile strength and Young’s modulus of 3D printed specimens using 14 wt% carbon fibre reinforcement filaments are higher (22.70 MPa and 1352.3 MPa, respectively) compared to the tensile strength and Young’s modulus of 3D printed specimens without reinforcement (19.72 MPa and 961.5 MPa, respec- tively). The elongation to failure is however reduced from 8.21% for specimens without reinforcement to 3.84% for specimens with reinforcement. 6) The mechanical properties of the 3D printed specimens are lower than those of the corresponding filaments used to 3D print for the specimens. This is attributed to interlayer cavities observed in 3D printed specimens and property anisotropy associated with fused filament fabrication.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the financial support provided by the Pan African University through the Institute of Basic Sciences, Technology & Innovation (PAUSTI) and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).

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Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

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DOI: 10.4236/ojcm.2021.113005 60 Open Journal of Composite Materials

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DOI: 10.4236/ojcm.2021.113005 61 Open Journal of Composite Materials